Where did the picture with the sleeping bag come from?
Anyone know what happened to the nacelle caps?
What gets me is fans with little more than time and devotion are able to recreate these sets and models faithfully yet studios with far more resources and money often can't seem to get it right.![]()
What gets me is fans with little more than time and devotion are able to recreate these sets and models faithfully yet studios with far more resources and money often can't seem to get it right.![]()
It's rather silly to suggest that those involved with Remastered TOS weren't fans or didn't respect the show.
It's also rather silly to compare a screen used cgi rendering to a photograph of the hangar deck maquette. A fairer comparison would be to a screencap.
https://getyarn.io/yarn-clip/7e3ec59d-12b6-4b49-b772-921919eafa34
Actually I did not mistake Petri Blomqvist's rendering as the filming model and with all respect can't see how anyone could. A juxtaposition of the original hangar deck model as it actually appeared onscreen along with CGI versions (supposedly good and bad) only followed my last post. As for opinions offered, I won't rebut them because there's no point. It is a "purist" view and likely held by the majority here (just not by me). Doesn't mean it's the one and only correct view. As for the "what gives them the right" question (Kirk impression), already answered by someone else: they own it. As I've said, I like remastered TOS and recall enjoying the new effects when they first aired (and still do). It was exciting at the time they first aired to watch Trek and anticipate / see something new, and that is a big reason I started watching it again (I started watching for the first time in the early 70s). Like actually seeing the Columbus shuttle in "The Galileo Seven" (even if they got the number wrong). But if you really want to see the same old original effects, reused over and over because of budget and time limitations, the beauty of it is...you can. Oh, and when it came to budget and time, the remastered creators (including Petri Blomqvist by the way) had their own limitations to contend with. Just one man's opinions.
Nice--one of the images from the Star Trek Postcard Book. Great memories of that book!
Not only is the CBS Digital version flat, grey, cartoony and lifeless, they actually altered the design of the Hangar Deck!
What the hell gave CBS Digital the right to do that?
Here is the bottom line, which version it the most faithful to the original?
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I mean no disrespect. As I said, I think you made the same mistake I did by thinking Bloomqvist's model was the real deal, but you have to admit that it's pretty sad when a fan does an infinitely better job than the very company that owns the property.
Spockboy
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